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Newstalk ZB’s Mike Hosking might just be David Walliams’ biggest fan — and he couldn’t believe it when the comedian surprised him in the studio this morning.
Walliams, who is in Auckland for his An Audience with David Walliams tour, sneaked into the Newstalk ZB studio on Friday before his first show, catching Hosking unawares while singing (I’ve Had) The Time of My Life from Dirty Dancing.
When he spotted Walliams, the broadcaster was gobsmacked. “No fricking way, how exciting is that! This is magnificent.”
“Hello mate, I’ve missed you. I worry about you in those tight jeans, a man of your age,” Walliams joked.
Walliams met Hosking and his wife, Kate Hawkesby, in London last year, joking with the radio host, “I remember Kate, but not you ... still married?”
He revealed the surprise had been in the works for some time “because you have a really huge crush on me, and it would be exciting for you”.
“Yes, I do,” Hosking confirmed.
When asked how the tour was going so far, Walliams said his shows in Australia had been “fantastic”.
“I’ve been so popular in Auckland that we added this show tonight,” he said.
David Walliams paid a surprise visit to the Newstalk ZB studio. Photo / Michael Craig
“I’ve got my funny stories that I’ve thought about what they are and I’m telling them ... but at the same time, the audiences have been so great in Australia, and I’m sure they’ll be even better in New Zealand, they sort of give you permission to kind of push it further and further and just be spontaneous,” the comedian told Hosking.
“It’s really restored my faith in performing comedy. Like, oh yeah, when we all get together in a room, what we really want is a laugh and it’s spontaneous, I’ve been saying some pretty rude things.”
Hosking confessed spontaneity was Hawkesby’s worry because she didn’t want to be embarrassed from their front-row seats.
Walliams jokingly replied that shouldn’t be an issue for the radio host. “You look like the kind of man that’d like attention.”
“No, I don’t want to be part of it, I just want to enjoy your talent,” Hosking responded.
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Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has been forced to wear a Highlanders jersey this morning after the team beat the Crusaders on the weekend.
Luxon —a die-hard Crusaders fan— had a bet with Newstalk ZB producer Sam Carran over the outcome of Saturday’s game.
He was a good sport at the NZME offices this morning, laughing as he donned the jersey - but he told ZB’s Mike Hosking to expect a “shocking interview”.
He said Carran was “the nicest man in the country” on the outside but inside was “Machiavellian”.
Luxon said he had warned Carran he was a size XL but the producer had given him an XS jersey.
Luxon last week maintained the Crusaders would turn around their losing form against the Highlanders, but it wasn’t to be.
Waitangi Tribunal appealLuxon told Hosking the Government is still considering whether to appeal the Court of Appeal’s judgement, which sided with the Waitangi Tribunal over its summons of Children’s Minister Karen Chhour.
”We only got the judgement yesterday. So it’s a pretty big judgement and we need to work our way through it, and then take advice on whether we will appeal it and what we’ll do next.
”The key issue was that “we don’t believe section 7AA is the right thing. We think the primacy of a child is important over above their cultural needs”.
Some of the information the Waitangi Tribunal had asked for was from Cabinet discussions, which was “frustrating”, he said.
The Government was trying to act in the spirit of “probity” - “making sure that the different branches of government are respectful of each other”.
Fast TrackingRegarding Monday’s announcement about new the regional roading programme, Luxon said the Government was “very up for bringing in private capital” for public-private partnerships.
The Fast-Track consenting process would be critical for many of the projects, and the planned National Infrastructure Agency would deal with financing and funding - working out whether private, domestic or international capital was most appropriate for each project.
New Zealand also needed to become more attractive for foreign capital, Luxon said - adding that NZ was ranked second-least attractive in the OECD in that respect, just ahead of Mexico.
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Christopher Luxon’s made the right call not going to Waitangi next year.
He's probably going to cop it from the press gallery for being a wuss but most of us have been around long enough to see the logic in this.
We know by now that Waitangi is volatile and unpredictable at the best of times. You can cop a dildo in the face for doing nothing.
So imagine how intense it will be next year with the Treaty Principles bill debate in full swing and the select committee progress already underway.
Already Willie Jackson has warned the Prime Minister about his safety if he goes up there because apparently Māori are angry.
And as Willie Jackson says, "you just never know".
It’s hardly as if Luxon is being made to feel welcome.
He’s apparently been told he’s allowed to come on the 6th but not on the 4th because he’s not welcome at the big meeting the National Iwi Chairs Forum hosts every year.
He’s had a letter from the hikoi organisers telling him he’s not welcome at Waitangi at all.
Luxon loses nothing by giving it a miss. I doubt very much he’ll win votes by going.
But he could actually lose votes by going and standing there like a piñata, taking a verbal bashing over a bill that’s actually not his.
He’s better off leaving the defending to the guy who’s actually responsible for the bill, David Seymour, who says he is going.
So Luxon I think can say he’s done enough, he's been there two years in a row already, he’s shown respect and defended his corner and he’s not being made to feel welcome.
He’s been threatened.
Right-minded people will absolutely, I think, understand why he may not want to go and why he frankly shouldn't.
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There’s an expectation that weakness in the last economic quarter is behind the country's slump.
Stats NZ reports gross domestic product dropped 1% in the September quarter.
We're now in our deepest recession since the Covid-driven slump of 2020.
Westpac Senior Economist Michael Gordon told Heather du Plessis-Allan that the grind the country has been experiencing throughout the year is now showing up a bit more fully than in the last GDP numbers.
He says one thing that stood out was the recognition of the cutbacks in the public sector, which weren’t being fully captured in the figures from three months ago.
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On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Friday 20th of December, the terrible economic news continues to get worse with the significant GDP drop and New Zealand is officially back in a recession.
Liam Lawson has finally been given the Red Bull seat the F1 world knew was already his, so commentator and former McLaren race team member Bob McMurray joined Heather du Plessis-Allan to share his thoughts.
Trish Sherson and Tim Wilson joined Heather to Wrap the Year in the final segment of 2024.
Get the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast every weekday morning on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Red Bull have given Liam Lawson his Formula 1 wings.
Lawson will take the Red Bull team's second seat for 2025 following the departure of Sergio Perez.
The Kiwi driver has raced 11 times across the previous two seasons as an emergency or mid-season replacement.
F1 Commentator Bob McMurray told Heather du Plessis-Allan that the task in front of Lawson is massive.
He says he’ll be expected to match —or better— a four-time world champion in a team he’s moulded around himself.
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Ashburton's incoming second bridge is being viewed as an economic lifeline for the South Island.
Work on the project will begin in 2026.
The Government will pay for its construction while the district council will foot the bill for the joining road.
Business Canterbury Chief Executive Leeann Watson says the current bridge has been washed away multiple times.
She told Heather du Plessis-Allan that significant volumes of freight pass through Ashburton daily.
Watson says it goes up to the Christchurch Airport and Lyttelton Port, so a bridge closure makes things difficult for businesses.
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A potential US government shutdown is on the cards as Donald Trump calls on Republican lawmakers to reject a cross-party funding bill.
The incoming president's urging Congress to scrap the deal and pass a streamlined bill.
His intervention follows heavy criticism of the bill by tech billionaire Elon Musk.
US Correspondent Richard Arnold told Heather du Plessis-Allan the deadline for an agreement is tomorrow night.
He says so far they won't have the bi-partisan vote numbers by that time.
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There's uncertainty if the Reserve Bank will change tack following the revelation of New Zealand's deep recession.
Stats NZ figures out yesterday show GDP fell 1% in the three months to September.
It’s also revised the preceding quarter down to 1.1% contraction.
Former Reserve Bank Economist Michael Reddell says it did achieve its goal of bringing inflation under control.
He told Heather du Plessis-Allan he doubts they'll ramp up the size of OCR cuts next year in response to the recession.
Reddell says it's more likely they'll go ahead with a 50 basis point cut, then tail them off next year.
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Health New Zealand's falling behind in its target to lift childhood vaccination rates.
The agency's quarterly performance report to the end of September shows immunisation rates for children at 24 months has fallen.
There was also a reduction in the number of people being seen in less than four months by a specialist.
Stays in emergency departments are shorter as more newborns are enrolled with GPs.
Chief executive Margie Apa told Heather du Plessis-Allan they're keeping a close eye on declining vaccination rates.
She says they've learned through covid it can be really helpful to get trusted people in the community.
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A proposed law change will prohibit universities from adopting positions on issues that aren't related to their core role and functions.
They'll be required to actively promote an environment where ideas can be challenged, controversial issues discussed, and diverse opinions expressed.
Universities will have to adopt a statement on freedom of speech and report annually on it.
Former Victoria University dean and NZ Initiative senior fellow Michael Johnston told Heather du Plessis-Allan it's not a silver bullet to solve the culture problem at universities, but is necessary.
He says problems on campuses are in part a result of a political bias pretty strongly to the left.
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One of the most surprising things about that judge allegedly yelling at Winston Peters in the Northern Club is that she is still in her job.
I want to be clear; I don’t want her to lose her job over this, and I don’t even want to be seen to be calling for her head.
I’m just pointing out that she should lose her job.
Because what happened was actually quite serious. We are talking about a judge yelling, not denied, at the deputy Prime Minister, the second most senior politician in the country.
She also accused him, again not denied, of lying in front of a room of people.
Now, you flip that around and imagine it’s a senior minister doing the same, yelling at very senior judges and saying they’re lying in front of a room full of people.
Tell me, does that minister keep their job?
No way. They go.
There’s no way that would be tolerated because no Government would want to be seen to tolerate that kind of behaviour, and it’s got to be the same for the judiciary. They cannot be seen to tolerate verbal attacks on ministers of Government.
Particularly right now. Maybe a few years ago it wouldn't have mattered quite as much.
But right now, there is actually considerable tension between the judiciary and the Government to the point it's actually boiling over at times.
We’ve got courts and lawyers taking cracks at Parliament and that Parliament passing multiple laws to reign in judges.
We’ve got accusations of the Waitangi Tribunal overreaching, Shane Jones making comments about so-called "activist judges" and there is a real concern that comity, which is the mutual respect between the two, is breaking down.
This is so fundamental to a democracy likes ours working.
It is so bad for the judiciary to be perceived to be this hostile towards the current Government.
I can’t see how Ema Aitken keeps her job.
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Most Kiwis will know the name Mark Hadlow.
The NZ Order of Merit recipient is best known internationally for his roles in King Kong and the Hobbit, but he has his fingers in many pies.
In 2017, Hadlow had a one man show called MAMIL (Middle Aged Man in Lycra), exploring the male midlife crisis and the way many of them turn to road cycling.
The show received rave reviews, touring the country for eight years.
Seven years on, Hadlow has created a sequel – GOMIL, standing for Grumpy Old Man in Lycra, premiering in Christchurch in early 2025.
He told Heather du Plessis-Allan that it was great being back in the saddle – literally.
“The show opens with a big sequence, so it’s really interesting getting back on the Pinarello again,” he said.
“Oh goodness me, that was fun.”
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As always, there are winners and losers in High Performance Sport’s latest funding round.
In the lead up to the LA Olympics in 2028, the organisation has allocated $163 million to 36 different sports.
Rowing, yachting, athletics, cycling, and canoeing all got a funding boost, while sports like hockey, equestrian, and men’s sevens are worse off.
Director Steve Tew says past performance was key when making the decision.
He told Heather du Plessis-Allan they really need to hone in on the sports, athletes, and teams that are tracking towards a top eight or podium in LA.
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On the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast for Thursday 19th of December, Heather du Plessis-Allan asks just how bad is our Q3 GDP will be, and whether we’ll slip back into a technical recession?
High Performance Sport NZ has decided who they're dishing out the funding to – so who are the winners and losers?
Kiwi actor and NZ Order of Merit recipient Mark Hadlow is bringing back his stage show 'Middle Aged Man in Lycra', by doing a sequel - ‘Grumpy Old Man in Lycra’.
Get the Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show Podcast every weekday morning on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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An economist says the third quarter was tough in pretty much every sector, for the New Zealand economy.
The major banks are all predicting between 0.2% to 0.4% contraction when Stats NZ releases the GDP data for the third quarter just before 11am today.
It'll likely mean our third technical recession in two years.
ASB's Chief Economist Nick Tuffley told Heather du Plessis-Allan the agriculture and forestry sector were essentially the only positive performers.
He says construction, retail, and manufacturing all felt the pressure, with electricity struggles also taking place during this quarter.
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There’s uncertainty around whether a large gas supplier staying in New Zealand will benefit the sector in the long run.
One of New Zealand's largest gas suppliers, OMV, will stay in the country.
Its executive board's decided not to sell 100% of its shares.
Enerlytica Director John Kidd told Heather du Plessis-Allan the sector needs continual re-investment.
He says the real question is if they keep investing, given they tried not to be the owner of the assets.
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The Government is defending its budgeting for the torture redress of Lake Alice survivors.
It's set aside more than $22 million for eligible survivors who were tortured at the psychiatric hospital in the 1970s.
They'll be able to choose between a one-off $150 thousand payment or apply for independently assessed redress.
Lead coordination minister Erica Stanford told Heather du Plessis-Allan it was a hard call to settle on $150 thousand.
She says there's no precedent for this situation anywhere in the world – other countries have paid out for torture in very different circumstance and the victims were adults.
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A 17-year old female student is the suspect in a school shooting in Madison, Wisconsin.
One teacher and a teen student have died, and six people were injured at the shooting at Abundant Life Christian School.
Police say the suspect was found dead.
CNN reports this is the US's 83rd school shooting this year, overtaking last year's record 82.
US Correspondent Richard Arnold told Heather du Plessis-Allan that evidence suggests the shooter died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
He says the family is said to be cooperating, and the girl left behind a note.
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